Reviews

Keeping Score by Linda Sue Park

darthchrista's review

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4.0

Now I know basics of scoring baseball AND the Korean War. Great book to read when learning about this period in history.

theblessedeveryday's review

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5.0

Admittedly I'm biased as I'm a sports fan, but for me this captured all the hope and joy, loss and doubt that we feel as fans, and as humans. This book transcends sport and is a beautiful tale of friendship.

mmz's review against another edition

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4.0

Like Linda Sue Park (as she says in her afterword), I don't remember learning to score a baseball game, but I know it was one of the many things my parents taught me to do as I was growing up. And like Maggie in this wonderful story, keeping score only added to my love of the game.

Park combines a story of a girl growing up with her love of the Brooklyn Dodgers (although the story ends before she would experience the ultimate disappointment of their move to Los Angeles) with a story about her concern about a friend who is sent to Korea and her growing awareness of the conflict there.

I couldn't give this book 5 stars because it gets a bit sappy near the end. But the rest of the book is well worth it, especially for Dodgers fans!

maidmarianlib's review against another edition

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4.0

Lovely story, nice girl and sports element but a lot of the baseball talk is a little confusing. Characters could have used more emotional depth, but very sweet over all.

evamadera1's review against another edition

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emotional lighthearted slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

2.75

While I did not dislike this book, I did not really like it either, hence the 3 star rating.
Park reliably crafts a solid narrative and develops her characters fairly well with slow moving plots. This plot, however, took far too long to unfold. One could make the argument for a lack of plot in most of the book. Additionally, Maggie, the protagonist, developed incredibly slowly even though the book takes place over the course of several years, and at the end still seems a bit like the 12 year old she was at the start of the book. 
While I love baseball and statistics, the friendship that developed between Maggie and Jim felt odd to me, slightly uncomfortable with Jim being a grown man who Maggie has no real ties to other than the fact that he works at her father's old firehouse. Nothing in Park's writing suggests anything untoward, I just have major issues with the concept of this friendship. Also, Maggie's fixation, which drives a lot of the plot that exists also bothered me. Perhaps structured a bit differently, I would have enjoyed this book more.

darthchrista's review against another edition

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4.0

Now I know basics of scoring baseball AND the Korean War. Great book to read when learning about this period in history.

mrskatiefitz's review against another edition

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3.0

This review also appears on my blog, Read-at-Home Mom.

Though she is a die-hard Brooklyn Dodgers fan, just like most of the guys at the firehouse where her father used to work, Maggie can't help but be intrigued by the new guy, Jim Maine, who roots for the Giants and scores all of the games by hand. Soon, Maggie is learning to keep score as well, a process which makes her feel especially connected to her beloved Dodgers. When Jim is eventually drafted into the army and sent to Korea, Maggie shifts from scoring games to scoring the war itself, trying to discern based on what she reads in the newspapers where Jim might be and when it might be time for him to come home. When he stops answering her letters, however, Maggie begins to despair, and when she learns what has become of him, she tries everything in her power to help him recover from a terrible experience.

I was pleasantly surprised to discover that this story portrayed a faithful Catholic family, and I enjoyed the references early in the book to choosing confirmation names, going to Confession, and going to church. Unfortunately, though, it became clear to me as I kept reading that the author had not done enough research on the Catholic Mass prior to Vatican II. On page 51, there is the following passage:

Every week in church, Father John or one of the other priests asked for intercessions, and then everyone prayed for other people. Usually, the intercessions were for people who were sick or hurt. Or had lost their jobs, or had gone off to Korea to fight in the war.

It is true that there is now a part of the Mass where the congregation prays for various intentions like the ones named here, and though it is not usual, there are even some parishes where individuals are asked to call out the specific causes for which they would like to pray. But this detail struck me right away as a possible anachronism, because prior to Vatican II, almost none of the Mass was said in the vernacular, and there would have been no opportunity for the congregation to participate so freely. I asked in a Catholic forum whether it was at all possible that intercessions such as these would have been included in a 1950s Mass, and the comments all adamantly stated that it would definitely not have happened. (A few did suggest that perhaps this was happening outside of the Mass, at another weekly church service, but that seems like a reach. I will admit that the author did not explicitly say it was happening at Mass, but the details were vague enough that the lack of clarity is as much a problem as the error itself.)

This is disappointing to me, not just because it's an incorrect detail in an otherwise favorable depiction of my religion, but also because of how much research went into the rest of the book. The author's note talks a lot about the author's sources for information about baseball and the war, but there is no mention at all of how her depiction of Catholicism came about. It is also disconcerting that an editor did not pick up on the error, as it would have been easy enough to ask a Catholic expert, or even just someone who attended Mass during that time period, to fact-check the few specific details about the Mass that are included in the story. The failure to do so makes it seem like the author did not consider the faith-based parts of her story to be as significant as the other storylines.

Aside from this problem, the book is decent, but not great. The plot is not exactly predictable, but it feels very obvious, and there is never a moment where the reader is really caught off-guard or surprised in any way. The story is told in a very linear, almost flat fashion, and it attempts to tell a story set over the course of several baseball seasons in the space of only about 200 pages, which makes the pacing feel off and the main character's psychological development feel forced and inauthentic. The premise was interesting, but its execution was poor. It's just not the author's strongest work, and not a book I plan to revisit for any reason.

annascottcross's review against another edition

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3.0

This was a sweet book, but I wanted a more conclusive ending.

luann's review

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4.0

I absolutely loved Maggie in this story, and I learned a lot I didn't know I would find interesting about baseball and keeping score. It doesn't matter what the subject is, I want to read every book by Linda Sue Park!
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